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Your Agency can Support a School-wide Positive Behavior Interventions & Supports (PBIS) Initiative: Here is how! Kelly Insert school/BHA graphic here.

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Presentation on theme: "Your Agency can Support a School-wide Positive Behavior Interventions & Supports (PBIS) Initiative: Here is how! Kelly Insert school/BHA graphic here."— Presentation transcript:

1 Your Agency can Support a School-wide Positive Behavior Interventions & Supports (PBIS) Initiative: Here is how! Kelly Insert school/BHA graphic here

2 Goals of this Presentation:
To learn the basics of Tier 1 school-wide PBIS. To learn how your agency can support schoolwide PBIS in the local school.

3 Understand the acronyms:
PBS=Positive Behavior Supports PBIS=Positive Behavior Intervention & Supports SWPBS=School-wide Positive Behavior Supports SW-PBIS=School- wide Positive Behavior Interventions & Supports Others?

4 Where it is being implemented in Alaska?
= Alaska School Districts

5 SW-PBIS is a broad range of systemic and individualized strategies for achieving important social and learning outcomes while preventing problem behavior OSEP Center on PBIS SW-PBS is: Evidence-based (over 10,000 schools in the US) A structural framework, NOT a curriculum, intervention, or practice It is a Decision making framework A positive approach based on teaching students appropriate behavior Individualized for each school An excellent match for Alaskan schools Cultural match Rural/remote match

6 Understand what PBIS is….
Actively invest in doing things before the children make mistakes. Active reinforcement from verbal to tangible reinforcement through the eyes of the students. Evidence-based practice. Framework to promote social skill development and establish a more effective learning environment. Starts with prevention first. Stress that it is proactive, preventative and positive.

7 FYI….Research on SW-PBIS states schools may see:
Increased attendance Increased positive social interactions between staff and students Increased learning (test scores) Increased graduation rate Increased teacher retention Improve school efficiency Increased administrative time Perception of increased teacher effectiveness Decreased truancy Decreased bullying Decreased drop-out rate Decrease Office Discipline Referrals Proactive, preventative measure for suicide Behavioral health staff could share this with parents. Helps to gain an understanding of the short and long term positive effects. Adapted from Rob Horner, Nov Northwest PBIS Coaching Conference Keynote

8 Understand the goals for the school’s SW-PBIS initiative
Understand the goals for the school’s SW-PBIS initiative. What is your role? 80% of students (and staff) can tell you what is expected of them. They can give behavioral example because they have been taught, actively supervised, practiced, & acknowledged Common language among students, staff, community, and family. The school environment is free of triggers that maintain problem behaviors. Create an effective learning environment that is physically and emotionally safe for all. Create a predictable, consistent, and positive school environment that promotes learning. Full continuum of behavior support is available to all students within school through inter-agency collaborations. Through this the agencies can speak the same language as school staff. Rob Horner, Nov Northwest PBIS Coaching Conference Keynote

9 Determine who can support PBIS!
School Family Behavioral Health Agency Everyone needs to work together for a common focus. Student

10 Learn and practice a “common focus & language” used by everyone in building…including behavioral health staff! Common Language MEMBERSHIP Common language: all say the same thing Common vision: instruction going the same way Common experience: everyone knows everyone knows (kids expect others to behave well and staff expect staff to model and teach) Common Experience Common Vision/Values Adapted from

11 Understand the Stages of Implementation: School & Agency.
2-3 yrs Exploration/ Adoption Installation Initial Implementation Development Commitment Establish Leadership Teams, Set Up Data Systems Full Implementation Provide Significant Support to Implementers Innovation and Sustainability Embedding within Standard Practice Improvements: Increase Efficiency and Effectiveness Explain the long-term commitment. A school can expect to work on SW-PBIS for up to 10 years until sustainable within school culture. Depending on when Behavioral Health Agencies become involved they may not be in the same place as the school and that is OK. BHA Here SD is here. Adapted from

12 Come up with a common and easy way to explain to parents:
A proactive, consistent, preventative social skills framework to promote a more effective learning environment. Starts with prevention first. Proactive investment in doing things before the children make mistakes. Based on evidence-based practices Structures reinforcement systems from verbal praise to tangible items created through the eyes of students (and staff). Explain it simple. Why need students involved? Rob Horner, Nov Northwest PBIS Coaching Conference Keynote

13 Social Competence, Treatment &
Academic Achievement Office Discipline Referrals Reward system data Suspension, expulsion, graduation rate, Replacement behavior data Intake process, Client Status Review Other? Supporting Staff Behavior OUTCOMES School District policy and procedures Behavioral Health policy & procedures. DATA SYSTEMS Supporting Decision Making Supporting Student Behavior In general, SWPBS emphasizes four integrated elements: (a) data for decision making, (b) measurable outcomes supported and evaluated by data, (c) practices with evidence that these outcomes are achievable, and (d) systems that efficiently and effectively support implementation of these practices. PRACTICES Teaching behavior classroom/non-structured behavior expectations .Interdisciplinary Team meetings & Treatment Planning. Implementing positive consequence system Implementing negative consequence system Evidence-based academic instruction/assessment Adapted from

14 Designing School-Wide Systems for Student Success
Academic Systems Behavioral Systems Intensive, Individual Interventions Individual Students Assessment-based High Intensity Intensive, Individual Interventions Individual Students Assessment-based (Data Driven) Intense, durable procedures 1-5% 1-5% Targeted Group Interventions Some students (at-risk) High efficiency Rapid response 5-10% 5-10% Targeted Group Interventions Some students (at-risk) High efficiency Rapid response Universal Interventions All settings, all students Preventive, proactive 80-90% If s child’s antisocial behavior is not changed by the end of grade 3 it should be treated as a chronic condition and managed with continued supports and interventions (Walker, Colvin, Ramsey, 1995) Like academic instruction, students will need differing levels of behavioral intervention and supports throughout their educational career to be successful. Universal Interventions All students Preventive, proactive 80-90%

15 Current School District Response to Intervention/Instruction
Special Education & 504s Academic PBIS Tier 3 RtI—Intensive individualized instruction, Progress monitoring, student contract, Tutoring, Coaching Tier 3 PBIS--Referrals to community counseling agencies & programs, Individual counseling, CPI, FBA/Behavior Plans Tier 2 RtI--Aimsweb/Progress Monitoring, Curricular Modifications, Small Group Lessons, Literacy Specialist, Fast ForWord, Homework Support, Math Whizz Tier 2 PBIS--Small group interventions, CPI, Behavior contract, Check-In Check-Out Tier 1 PBIS--Matrix lesson plans, Positive reinforcement systems (school -wide & classroom), Guidance counseling curriculum For this slide please add school district specific interventions these listed are just a sample. Tier 1 RtI--SBAs, MAP, General Ed Curriculum, DRAs Current School District Response to Intervention/Instruction

16 In/Out State Residential Placement, Hospitalization, Step down residential placement,
Behavioral Health Service Delivery by Tiers of Support Educational Service Delivery by Tiers of Support Home/School based PBIS Tier 3: Intensive Individualized Interventions 6 or more Office Discipline Referrals General Education with support, Functional Behavior Assessment, Behavior support plan, Special Education Referral, 504 Referral/ Plan, Crisis intervention, PBIS data-based decision-making & planning. Suicide Intervention (ASIST) Tier 3: Intensive therapeutic support Family & small group support, Full time wrap around support, School based services, Case management, Treatment plan development & review, Crisis intervention, Therapeutic foster care, PBIS Tier 2: 2-5 Office Discipline Referrals (Targeted small group interventions) Intervention Action Planning, Check In-Check Out, School counselor targeted small groups, School counselor check-in support, Suicide intervention (AK Gatekeeper, ASIST), Mentor programs, Peer support programs, Crisis Prevention Intervention, Bully-prevention targeted interventions. Tier 2: Out Patient Services Therapeutic targeted small groups in and out of school, Family support, wrap around services, Intake process, Case management, Client status review, Treatment planning development & review, Crisis intervention This shows service delivery options by tier of support. Please remember that students can move from one tier to another. Tier 1:Universal Awareness/ screening activities Stand by for crisis intervention/ assessment, community awareness activities, educational topical support (drugs, alcohol, tobacco, suicide prevention), etc. Relationship building. PBIS Tier 1: 0-1 Office Discipline Referrals (School-wide Universal Supports) School-wide matrix development & lesson plans, school violation & positive reinforcement systems (school -wide & classroom), Data based decision-making, Guidance counseling curriculum. Safe TALK/ Kognito/ SOS suicide prevention training/screening, Bully prevention training.

17 ? Roles of: District Administration, Behavioral Health Agency, and school-based teams

18

19 Define Administration’s Roles and Responsibilities
Administrator should be familiar with school’s current data and reporting system Administrator should play an active role in the school-wide and agency PBIS implementation process Support Behavioral Health staff ALL administrators are encouraged to participate in the process Administrators should actively communicate their commitment to the process If a school principal or behavior health agency director is not committed to the PBIS process, it is unwise to move forward with a collaborative process!

20 Coaching Support to Behavioral Health Agencies
Internal Coach Day to day resource for school and behavior health support. Oversees the PBIS process and keeps it moving internally. Checks in with Implementation Team(s) for fidelity. Promote communication and collaborative interventions. Streamline referral process for Tier 2 & 3. External Coach Provide PBIS professional development for Agency staff. Design the “road map” for implementation and collaboration. Keep things going. Provide resources and “cheat sheets”. Support the Internal Coach and Behavior Health Agency.

21 Get to Know Tier 1 in the SW-PBIS Implementation Process

22 And what they will do to get there! Tier 1 Implementation“8 Steps”
Establish a school-level SW-PBS Leadership Team School-behavior purpose statement Set of positive expectations and behaviors. Procedures for teaching school-wide expected behaviors Procedures for teaching classroom wide expected behaviors. Continuum of procedures for encouraging expected behaviors. Continuum of procedures for discouraging rule violations. Procedures for on-going data-based monitoring and evaluation. Help staff understand these are the necessary steps to implement SW-PBIS. It is evidence-based and supported through research. This is very comprehensive and may require some school systems to be reviewed and refined. Want to make systems better and not replace what is already working. Consistent or implementing with fidelity will screen out 80% of students having their needs met through the discipline referral process. Allow to identify students requiring more support such as….School based leadership team to monitor the implementation of the eight steps If staff on board can be in place in a few months. Tier 1

23 Tier 1-Step 1: Establish a School-wide PBIS Leadership Team
What is the agencies role with the School-wide PBIS Leadership Team?

24 SW-PBIS Leadership Team: Identify key players (3-8 members)
School *Behavioral Health Agency District Responsible for district wide commitments and SW-PBIS planning School Administrative Team must be committed to SW- PBIS and actively participate on the team Responsible for student and building wide SW-PBIS planning and implementation SW-PBIS school leadership team should remain small (3-8 members) Promote interagency collaboration Provide community and in-home updates Support home-school communication and support (Tier 2 & 3) Assist with Agency linkages for student support. Crisis response/ interventions. Counseling support Data sharing This slide shows the collaboration that can happen on the leadership team and the different perspectives they can bring. *As appropriate

25 Discussion How can your agencies support the SW-PBIS leadership team? What role do you play? 5 to 10 minute group discussion to determine common focus.

26 What’s behavioral health’s role with the PBIS initiative?
Tier 1-Steps 2 & 3: Behavior Purpose Statement and Positive Behavior Expectations What’s behavioral health’s role with the PBIS initiative?

27 Understand the school wide matrix..
Insert your schools matrix here and create a matrix for your agency.

28 Insert your schools matrix here

29 This is a sample of what a matrix might look like in a counseling office setting.

30 Discussion Where does PBIS fit into your Agency culture?
5 to 10 minute group discussion to begin action planning on how SW-PBIS will be implemented in your agency’s culture.

31 Tier 1-Steps 4 & 5: Teaching Behavior Expectations
How can behavioral health agencies reinforce teaching of the school wide expectations/ school rules?

32 Sample lesson plan For additional lesson plan samples go to

33 How does teaching behavior expectations fit into your work with clients?
5 to 10 minute discussion on how behavior expectations and teaching of those expectations fit into treatment planning.

34 What behavioral health initiatives or grants does your agency have that fit with SW-PBIS?

35 Education of Parents & Community
Parenting with Love & Logic or Love & Limits Suicide Awareness, Prevention & Postvention activities Safe TALK, AK Gatekeeper, ASISIT Mental Health First Aid training Transition to Independence TIP training Bully Prevention Cognitive therapy Anger management Tobacco Alcohol Drug abuse programs Kelly

36 Discussion In what ways do PBIS and other agency projects work together? 5 to 10 minute discussion

37 Tier 1-Step 6: Encouraging Positive Behavior Expectations
How can your agency support the school wide PBIS reinforcement system?

38 Set up School-wide Reward Systems
Sample reward system pictures…… what do the PBIS reward systems look like in your school please insert your own artifacts

39 Discussion How can behavioral health agencies support and implement the the reward systems? 5 to 10 minute discussion on how your agency can implement /replicate the school based PBIS reward system in the agency and how can your agency staff can implement the reward system when in the school building.

40 Tier 1-Step 7: Discouraging Rule Violations
How can the consistent violation system help your clients?

41 Clearly outlined process for all to follow.
Sample please insert your schools behavior flow chart here

42 Clearly (operationally defined) behaviors.

43 Consistent Office Discipline Referral Form.
Please insert your schools office discipline referral form

44 Tier 1-step 8: Data-based Decision Making and Evaluation
How can the consistent data collection process help students reach YOUR treatment goals?

45 Data collection system established and in use.
sample For demo go to

46 sample

47 5 Key Components to Data Based Decision Making in school and treatment
Average number of referrals per day Location of incident Time of incident Behavior that occurred Student name How might these relate to your clients treatment plans?

48 Discussion How can this violation system data be used to support your treatment decisions? 5 to 10 minute discussion on….. How might these relate to your clients treatment plans?

49 Questions? kelly

50 Contact Information: Please place you information here


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